a reasonable offer has been made by the provider to resolve your complaint

we issue the Complaint Outcome

we confirm our Recommendations, if we have made any.

We will also close the complaint if it is withdrawn or terminated before a review is concluded. You can of course also withdraw your complaint at any time throughout the process.

What can you do if you think we have made a mistake in the Complaint Outcome, or you have new evidence?

Sometimes the decisions that we reach, or the Recommendations we make, are not the ones that you or the provider expected or wanted. We hope that the reasons for our decisions are clear, but if you still have queries please contact the case-handler in the first instance.

You can ask us to reopen our review of the complaint. We will normally only consider such a request if it is made within 28 days of us issuing the Complaint Outcome (if the complaint is Not Justified), or the date we confirm the Recommendations (if the complaint is Partly Justified or Justified). If you make the request more than 28 days after we have finished our review, you will need to explain why you didn’t do it sooner.

We may decide to reopen our review if we receive new evidence which could make a difference to the outcome of the review, and which you or the higher education provider could not reasonably have given to us earlier, or if there is a "substantive error" in the Complaint Outcome, that is an error which is likely to have seriously affected our decision or our Recommendations.

Judicial review

Our decisions and processes can be challenged by judicial review. The Courts and Tribunals Judiciary defines judicial review, as “a type of court proceeding in which a judge reviews the lawfulness of a decision or action made by a public body. In other words, judicial reviews are a challenge to the way in which a decision has been made, rather than the rights and wrongs of the conclusion reached.”

Please note that claims must normally be brought promptly, and within three months of the decision or action being challenged. We strongly advise you to seek specialist legal advice before instituting legal proceedings. Learn more about judicial reviews.

You may also be able to bring a claim for judicial review or take other legal proceedings against your provider, but you will need to do so promptly – normally within a month of our decision.